Are Excessive Prices Really Self-Correcting?
18 Pages Posted: 21 Aug 2008 Last revised: 11 Jan 2009
There are 2 versions of this paper
Are Excessive Prices Really Self-Correcting?
Are Excessive Prices Really Self-Correcting?
Date Written: August 19, 2008
Abstract
Excessive pricing by a dominant firm is considered as one of the most blatant forms of abuse. Despite this, in many instances, competition authorities refrain from intervening against excessive prices. The non-interventionist approach is based, among others, on the premise that high prices encourage new entry and thereby should be feared less. According to this view, in many cases, excessive prices are likely to be competed away and make intervention redundant. The following paper questions this conventional view and reconsiders whether excessive prices are indeed self-correcting. It illustrates how in the majority of cases excessive prices will not attract new entry of viable competitors, whether entry barriers are high or low. Furthermore, it shows how at times the prohibition of excessive prices may encourage, rather than discourage, entry. By doing so the paper narrows and focuses the arguments against intervention. Accordingly, it concludes that if excessive pricing is not to be prohibited it should not be due to it being 'self-correcting' but rather for reasons such as the need to stimulate investment or difficulties of implementation, which should be assessed on a case by case basis.
Keywords: antitrust, competition law, abuse of dominance, monopoly, excessive price, predatory pricing
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation
Do you have a job opening that you would like to promote on SSRN?
Recommended Papers
-
When are Excessive Prices Unfair?
By Pinar Akman and Luke Garrod
-
When are Excessive Prices Unfair?
By Pinar Akman and Luke Garrod
-
Abusive Pricing in an IP Licensing Context: An EC Competition Law Analysis
-
Excessive Pricing, Entry, Assessment, and Investment: Lessons from the Mittal Litigation
By David Gilo and Ariel Ezrachi
-
Excessive Pricing and the Goals of Competition Law - An Enforcement Perspective
-
Bargaining in the Shadow of the European Settlement Procedure for Cartels